America's firstimmigration center

CastleGarden.org is an educational project of The Battery Conservancy. This free site offers access to an extraordinary database
of information on 11 million immigrants from 1820 through 1892,
the year Ellis Island opened. More than 100 million Americans can trace
their ancestors to this early immigration period.

Castle Garden, today known as Castle Clinton National Monument, is the major landmark within The Battery,
the 25 acre waterfront park at the tip of Manhattan. From 1855 to 1890, the Castle was America's first official
immigration center, a pioneering collaboration of New York State and New York City.

CastleGarden.org is an invaluable resource for educators, scholars,
students, family historians, and the interested public.

The Battery remains one of the oldest public open spaces in continuous
use in New York City. Native Americans fished from its banks, and
the first Dutch settlers built a low, stone wall with cannons, a
battery, to protect the harbor and the fledgling city of New Amsterdam. The transformations
of The Battery and the Castle tell the history of New York
and, by association, the growth and development of our nation.